Title
REDD+ and equity outcomes: Two cases from Cameroon
Date Issued
01 October 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Tegegne Y.T.
Palmer C.
Moustapha N.M.
Fobissie K.
Moro E.
Center for International Forestry Research
Publisher(s)
Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
One reason for recent opposition to REDD+ stems from concerns about possible welfare impacts on forest-dependent, especially indigenous peoples. We assess how two projects with community payments (PES / REDD+) impacted indigenous peoples (Baka) relative to the locally dominant ethnic group (Bantu) in south-eastern Cameroon, trying to understand to which extent the projects addressed equity concerns. We gathered empirical data through a household questionnaire survey, indepth interviews, and focus group discussions in six villages. Overall, we found little support for the hypothesis that indigenous peoples were disadvantaged by the projects, absolutely and relative to the locally dominant ethnic group, along procedural and distributive equity dimensions. Yet, upfront contextual inequities with respect to technical capabilities, power, gender, level of education, and wealth are key to determining an individual's likelihood of participating in and benefiting from the projects. Our analysis also revealed that more complex and time-consuming free prior informed consent processes could actually come to reinforce power imbalances and inequities. Hence, we call attention to the key role contextual factors play for equity and social safeguards when implementing REDD+ and associated interventions.
Start page
324
End page
335
Volume
124
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias del medio ambiente Sociología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85110032485
Source
Environmental Science and Policy
ISSN of the container
14629011
Sponsor(s)
The second—the Ngoyla–Mintom REDD+ project—was financed by the European Union and implemented by the World Wildlife Fund for Nature (WWF) Cameroon in 2011–17. It encompassed four villages in south-eastern Cameroon, three of which are Bantu-majority villages (i.e., Messok-Messok, Etekessang, and Zoulabot), whereas the fourth (Ndimako) is a predominantly Baka village. Ndimako (Baka village) and Etekessang (Bantu village) share a community forest, while the other villages have their own community forests. This means that the Bantu of Etekessang and the Baka of Ndimako interacted with each other in the decision-making process relating to REDD+. Hence, the household survey data gathered from Etekessang and Ndimako were merged (See Table 6 ). Two community forest carbon projects were analyzed ( Fig. 2 ). The first—the Nomedjoh–Nkolenyeng Community PES project—was implemented in 2009–12 by the Cameroonian NGO Centre for Environment and Development (CED), with financial support from UK–DFID. It encompassed two villages and their respective community forests: Nkolenyeng—a predominantly Bantu village in southern Cameroon—and Nomedjoh, a predominantly Baka village in eastern and southern Cameroon.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus